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October 2009 Issue
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Just One
More Soul
My Vision for the Year 2009-2010
Morris
H. Chapman's Address to the SBC Executive Committee September
21, 2009
During my final year in office as president of the Executive
Committee of the SBC, I would like to announce a prayer initiative
to support the Great Commission Resurgence. Many
of us have longed for a Spiritual Awakening a true Holy
Spirit empowered, culture-changing anointing of God upon His people
and our land. This prayer initiative is simple in application,
yet its potential impact is profound. I am asking you as members
of the Executive Committee, executive staff, entity heads, and
guests to join me in praying daily for "Just One More Soul."
Seventy years ago, B. B. McKinney wrote these powerful lyrics:
Lord lay some soul upon my heart and love that soul through
me;
and may I bravely do my part to win that soul for Thee.
You will notice that these lyrics properly relegate the winning
of each soul to the Lord, for only the Holy Spirit can generate
life in the heart of a wayward sinner. And yet, we must bravely
do our part. What is our part? It is threefold it is to
pray for the lost, go to the lost, and speak with the lost about
the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.
British Baptist William Carey sparked intense theological debate
and methodological opposition in 1792 when he penned a short booklet
entitled An Inquiry into the Obligation of Christians to Use
Means for the Conversion of the Heathen. What was controversial
about this small volume? The insistence that we must use means
that we must bravely do our part to convert
the lost. God's part is to win; our part is to witness.
British Baptist theologian Andrew Fuller, who preached Carey's
ordination service, provided an intellectual framework for Carey's
evangelistic passion and theological assertion that we have an
obligation to use means for the conversion for the lost.
Soon, young pastor Charles Haddon Spurgeon was making waves
of his own. He challenged the hyper-Calvinists of his day by preaching
passionately for the souls of men and women, establishing an inquiry
room for those who came under conviction, and repudiated the grammatical
hijinks of those who sought to limit the love of God and hinder
the free offer of God's gracious invitation to repent, believe,
and be eternally saved. Among his notable written legacy is his
powerful volume called The Soul-Winner.
In this volume, Spurgeon chided one of his students who lacked
an expectant spirit that the Lord would save someone every time
he preached the Gospel.
Spurgeon wrote:
"You may have heard the story of one of our first students,
who came to me and said, 'I have been preaching now for some months,
and I do not think I have a single conversion.' I said to him,
'And do you expect that the Lord is going to bless you and save
souls every time you open your mouth?' 'No, sir,' he replied.
'Well, then,' I said, 'that is why you do not get souls saved.
If you had believed, the Lord would have given the blessing.'
I had caught him very nicely; but many others would have answered
me in just the same way he did. They tremblingly believe it is
possible, by some strange mysterious method that once in a hundred
sermons God might win a quarter of a soul."
In essence, Spurgeon urged his preacher boys to "bravely
do their part" to win some soul for the Lord.
It seems as if we as Southern Baptists have lost our passion
for personal evangelism. In 1954, J. N. Barnette wrote an intriguing
Study Course volume entitled One to Eight. It was a manual
taught in our Southern Baptist churches encouraging personal evangelism
through small groups, with a goal of an evangelistic ratio of
one-to-eight.
Our historical baptism records show that those who were poised
to win the world in the 1950s and 1960s readily engaged the culture
in which they lived. They had a passion to win the lost at any
cost.
It is time we quit debating evangelism, decrying the lack of
baptisms, and disrespecting the generations for whom personal
evangelism was front and center. Last year, our baptism records
reflected a disappointing ratio, not of 1:8, but 1:48!
Have we become too technologically sophisticated to actually
go out where the people are and engage them in personal conversation
with an intention of persuading them of the Gospel?
When was the last time you sought to engage a lost person in
a conversation about the Gospel in an intentional effort to win
that soul to faith in Jesus Christ? Scripture is clear, both in
precept and by example, that we are to use "means"
verbal means to win the lost to personal faith in Jesus
Christ as Lord.
Note the words of Jesus in Acts 1:8 you shall be
My witnesses witnesses to the saving work of our Lord
Jesus Christ!
Note the examples of evangelism woven throughout the rest of
the book: words like explaining, reasoning, testifying, preaching,
persuading, demonstrating, teaching, proclaiming, heralding, and
warning!
What is the one thing each of these words has in common? In
each instance, these were spoken words spoken to individuals
who were lost and in need of a Savior. Spoken with urgency. Spoken
with passion. Spoken with confidence in the Lord's willingness
to save all who would come to Him. Some believed. Some did not.
The Apostles made no distinction in sharing the Gospel. They sought
to win the lost at any cost.
I think of Jesus telling the woman at Jacob's
well that He is the Messiah and the water of life (John 4).
I relate with the cry of the father of the child with
mute spirit, "Lord, I believe, help my unbelief!" (Mark
9).
I am challenged when I read of Andrew first finding
his own brother Simon Peter and bringing him to Jesus (John
1).
I smile as I hear Philip explaining the "Gospel
according to Isaiah" to the Ethiopian eunuch in the
Judean wilderness (Acts 8).
I see Peter still wrestling to understand God's vision
when a knock on the door leads him to tell the Good News to Cornelius
and his household (Acts 10).
I feel the passion of Paul as he shares his personal
testimony of conversion and urges Agrippa to receive Jesus
Christ as his Lord (Acts 26).
I weep as I see Stephen heralding forth the Gospel even
while the stones are striking his body (Acts 7).
How often have we quoted and cited Acts 1:8 for a variety of
reasons and with multiple applications? But, how often may we
have glossed over the opening phrase: You shall receive power
...
Physicists tell us there are two kinds of power or energy:
kinetic (energy in use) and potential (energy stored). The Lord
did not create us in Christ Jesus to become batteries, storing
and holding power within ourselves. He created us to be conduits,
electrical lines, charged particles, delivering evangelistic light
and heat to our dark and cold world. The power only flows when
the switch is on, and for us, the switch is our lips when we tell
the Good News of Jesus Christ to a lost and lonely man or woman,
boy or girl.
This is the consistent testimony of the Book of Acts. The power
of the Gospel flowed when the lips of the evangelists moved. Let
me say that again the power of the Gospel flowed when the
lips of the evangelists moved.
The human tongue is the switch that releases the power of the
Gospel. When the tongue is silent, we are no more useful to the
Kingdom than a stump in the forest. When the tongue is silent,
we are like the sheer cliff face rising above the forest below
beautiful to behold, but aloof, inaccessible, revealing
the glory of God's new creation in us, but ineffective in proclaiming
the Law of the LORD that alone is able to convert the soul. It
is only when we open our mouths that we become His witnesses
and only then does the power flow!
What is God's part in the salvation of the lost? Of course,
He prepares the soil of the human heart to receive the Word of
God. He sends the sunshine and rain.
What is our part in salvation of the lost? To tell the Good
News intentionally, willingly, joyfully, courageously,
faithfully, obediently ... and most of all, prayerfully. It seems
apparent to me that soul-winning is the ultimate spiritual discipline.
We can pray ... and never tell.
We can read the Bible ... and never tell.
We can fast ... and never tell.
We can give ... and never tell.
We can attend ... and never tell.
We can meditate ... and never tell.
But the moment you open your mouth in witness, you are driven
to pray, you are driven to know the Word more fully, you
are driven to fast, you are driven to give, you are driven
to attend, you are driven to meditate.
As I've already mentioned, I would like for this to be my challenge
to you and to our larger Southern Baptist family during my final
year as president of the Executive Committee. When I was elected
president of the Convention in 1990, we were in year eleven of
the Battle for the Bible the Conservative Resurgence. As
I prepare to pass the baton of leadership of the Executive Committee
in 2010, I hope we will be in year two of a Great Commission
Resurgence.
Two months after I was elected president of the Convention
in 1990, I had the privilege of participating in a phenomenal
evangelistic crusade in the nation of Kenya. The Lord allowed
me to see and experience a mighty work of God. For these past
nineteen years, I have longed for and prayed for a Spiritual Awakening
to take place in my lifetime. This was the motivation behind calling
for Crossover Atlanta in 1991, Kingdom Families
in 2000, forming the EKG Task Force, and launching the Empowering
Kingdom Growth initiative in 2002.
Next September, I will conclude twenty years of visible leadership
in Southern Baptist life. I can think of no more fitting farewell
than to see us come together as Southern Baptists under the banner
of evangelism, in obedience to Matthew 28:19-20, 1 Peter 3:15,
and Romans 1:16.
I announce my retirement with mixed emotions. The past seventeen
years have been some of the most rewarding years a minister of
the Gospel will ever experience. The relationships, the vision,
the opportunities for service have been both challenging and fulfilling.
I have been privileged to see the best of what makes the Southern
Baptist Convention great its people, pastors, denominational
servants, and fellow entity heads. At the same time, trying to
give guidance to an organization as complex and decentralized
as the SBC may be one of life's most challenging responsibilities.
I shall be in constant prayer as our chairman appoints a transition
team to secure the services of my successor. I do so in quiet
confidence that our gracious Father will guide their steps to
the person He already has prepared for this role for such a time
as this.
I also pledge to pray this prayer each day during this next
year as well: "Just one more soul, dear Lord. Just one more
soul."
Imagine if ...
Every church in the Convention adopted this prayer. We would
see an increase of 45,000 baptisms next year, moving us from 341,000
to almost 400,000.
Imagine if ...
Every Sunday School class adopted this prayer. I have no way
of knowing how many Sunday School classes, small groups, or cell
groups meet weekly in our churches. Let's say there is an average
of only five per church. This could result in five classes per
church times 45,000 churches resulting in 225,000 new souls added
to the Kingdom, plus the 341,000 we baptized this year. A record
year in baptisms would be reached with little additional effort
just one more soul per class, per church, per pastor, per
Executive Committee member, per entity head.
I pray that 2009-2010 will be a year of a Great Commission
Resurgence a recapturing of the passion for lost
souls. Will you join with me in praying during this year: "Just
one more soul, dear Lord; just one more soul." And, when
He gives you one, pray it all over again. And when He gives you
another, pray it all over again. And again, and again, and again.
I ask all pastors and heads of Southern Baptist organizational
life to call your people together. In a spirit of worship, ask
all who will to pray for one person every day until that person
is saved or one of you dies. Ask them to make their pledge by
coming to the altar. While they are standing and/or kneeling,
ask them if they will trust God to help them witness to the saving
power of Jesus Christ and Him crucified until they are saved,
reject the Gospel outright, or one of you dies. If and when the
person is saved, encourage them to obey the Lord Jesus Christ
by following Him in believer's baptism. If you will do this several
times during the coming months, those who actively witness as
members of your church or organization will multiply significantly.
As a result, you may see hundreds, even thousands come to Christ.
It's worth a try. This would be a Great Commission Resurgence.
My prayer is that we shall give our Lord Jesus Christ all the
glory. Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly
above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh
in us, unto him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus throughout
all ages, world without end. Amen (Ephesians 3:20-21, KJV).
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© 2010 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
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